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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> West Midlands Travel Ltd v Aviva Insurance UK Ltd [2013] EWCA Civ 887 (18 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/887.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 887 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
LIVERPOOL DISTRICT REGISTRY
His Honour Judge Armitage Q.C.
OLV00559
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
and
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL
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WEST MIDLANDS TRAVEL LTD |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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AVIVA INSURANCE UK LTD |
Defendant/Appellant |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr. Craig Sephton Q.C. and Mr. David Boyle (instructed by Hill Dickinson) for the respondent
Hearing date : 6th June 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moore-Bick :
"If the appellants had hired a dredger instead of purchasing one, and had during the months they were deprived of its use been bound to pay for its hire, it cannot be doubted that the sums so paid could have been recovered. How can they the less be entitled to damages because, instead of hiring a dredger, they invested their money in its purchase? The money so invested was out of their pockets, and they were deprived of the use of the dredger, to obtain which they had sacrificed the interest on the money spent on its purchase. A sum equivalent to this, at least, they must surely be entitled to. But I think they are also entitled to general damages in respect of the delay and prejudice caused to them in carrying out the works entrusted to them. It is true these damages cannot be measured by any scale; but that would be equally true in the case of damages in respect of the deprivation of an individual of a chattel which he had purchased for purposes of comfort and not profit."
"The services of the Orion , however, were valuable, and why should the appellants claim to have them gratuitously, including the wages of the men who might have been employed on board her? They might equally claim gratuitously to have the services of skilled workmen – engineers hired by the year and paid by the respondents – who happened at the time to be idle, or to have no particular work in hand. That cannot be, and in my judgment is not, the law. In my opinion the value of the services ought to be paid as a compensation for the damage which accrued to the respondents by reason of the detention of their vessel under the circumstances."
" . . . in my opinion, in a case like the present the out-of-pocket expenses which the owner is compelled to incur, notwithstanding the stoppage, and the depreciation and loss of interest on capital, measure his loss by the delay, assuming of course that the benefit derived by working is only to be treated as equivalent to the expenditure. Applying this reasoning to the present case and for the moment making the main assumption asked for by the plaintiffs, it follows that by the delay in question they lost the actual cost for insurance, wages, general charges, &c., properly chargeable against the dredger, during the delay, and the depreciation and loss of interest on capital for that time."
"This is where I think the registrar went wrong in his original judgment. He took it as if there had been proof of special damage, but there is nothing of that sort in the case; the Admiralty were able to supply the gap made by the accident out of their resources. That does not mean that they are not entitled to any damages. If their fleet were sufficient to provide a stand-by, then the expenses of keeping that stand-by may fairly be taken into consideration. Such expenses mean not only the daily upkeep but something representing the amount of capital which had been parted with in order to have another ship, but the initial figure of cost does not necessarily represent that capital. Not only has there been necessary deterioration by lapse of time, but a vessel's condition may not be worth what was originally paid for it, quite apart from the deterioration. All these are mere considerations; the registrar must do his best to allow a just but not an extravagant figure, and compensate, as far as money can do, the detriment which was in the whole circumstances imposed on the Admiralty by the deprivation of the services of the Prestol for twenty-two days."
"The whole suggestion of chartering at this time is pure speculation. The fact is that the Admiralty by prompt effort and economy in consumption, acting in accordance with their obligation to minimize the damages, managed to get through their work without the Prestol, and they cannot get damages based on the use of a stand-by when in fact they did very well without one."
"All the same the Prestol's services during the time of repair were lost, and accordingly the principle of The Greta Holme may be applied, with such rates of interest and depreciation as the evidence may justify. In other words, the loss of user for the time of repair, in effect, made the Prestol's then capital value infructuous for the time being, even though by special effort more benefit was got out of other ships, in which other capital was invested, than would otherwise have been the case."
Neither Viscount Dunedin nor Lord Sumner appears to have thought that the award of damages was likely to vary significantly, whichever approach was adopted.
"45. Thus the net result of the shipping cases can be stated as follows. Where a substitute vessel is hired in to fulfil the role of the damaged vessel, the costs of hiring in are recoverable. Where the claimant's fleet is sufficient to provide a standby, then an award may be made based upon the expenses of keeping that standby, which means not only the expenses of daily upkeep but something representing the amount of capital employed in having another ship available. Where there is no substitute ship hired and no standby ship kept available the damages awarded are generally to be calculated on the basis of interest on the capital value of the damaged ship at the time of the collision."
"49. . . . general damages are in principle recoverable for loss of use but should be the subject of an award of such sum as reasonably compensates for the nature and extent of the financial loss suffered as a result of the neutering of the damaged vehicle as an asset employed in the claimant's business and the redeployment of any other such asset. In the instant case, by reason of the judge's findings and the nature of the claimant's business it was able to "make do" out of stock. The judge found that is what it should have done and as a result the award should be limited to an appropriate sum by way of general damages."
" . . . the out-of-pocket expenses which the owner is compelled to incur, notwithstanding the stoppage, and the depreciation and loss of interest on capital, measure his loss by the delay, assuming of course that the benefit derived by working is only to be treated as equivalent to the expenditure."
" . . . it seems to me, on the whole, reasonable to consider that where the damages are not really proved, the Court is at liberty to assess them by awarding to the plaintiffs sufficient to compensate them for their actual out-of-pocket expenses, depreciation upon the vessel, and loss of interest upon the capital."
Costs
Lord Justice Rimer :
Lord Justice Underhill :